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Looking Back: The Victory Lancastrian
Written by Raymond Canon   
190-lookbackAfter the end of World War II thousands of aircraft of all shapes and sizes were declared redundant to military requirements and turned into scrap. A few were sold at rock-bottom prices to be used as corporate aircraft, racers and in some cases chicken-coops. At the Trenton Air Base enthusiasts are busy reconstructing a Halifax bomber and there have been numerous other activities of a similar nature.

One such move was with the Avro Lancaster, a rebuilt flying model of which is now located at the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum at Hamilton International Airport. The Lancaster, the most widely used of the British 4-engined bombers during the Second World War was recognized early as an aircraft having other possibilities. In 1942 Victory Aircraft, Avro’s Canadian subsidiary at Malton where the Lancaster was being produced, decided to take two of the existing airframes and convert them to a passenger configuration.

The following year the first completed aircraft, Lancaster XPP, made its initial flight and, while both it and the second aircraft were eventually lost, one over the Atlantic in 1944 and the other as a result of a fire during an engine run, this was not before they set a speed record across the Atlantic, flying from Dorval to Prestwick in 12 hrs, 26 minutes. Their overall performance was enough that Trans-Canada Air Lines (now Air Canada) had Canadair build a further five examples CF-CMS and CF-CMV-Z.